Don’t let the door hit you like a linebacker on your way out, Ben McAdoo and Jerry Reese. The New York Giants have fired both their head coach and general manager following the unceremonious benching of two-time Super Bowl MVP quarterback Eli Manning.

At a pathetic 2-10, the Giants still have four games left to navigate this season. Defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo will be the interim head coach for the remaining games, according to ESPN.

McAdoo sat Manning for Sunday afternoon’s game against the Oakland Raiders in favor of backup Geno Smith. The call was an extremely unpopular decision in the New York area, and it effectively snapped Manning’s impressive 210-consecutive starts streak.

The Giants lost the game anyway, and Smith finished a very pedestrian 21 for 34 for 212 yards. He had one touchdown pass, but lost two fumbles.

Smith spent the previous four years as a quarterback on the New York Jets roster. After a pair of tough seasons to start his career, Smith was relegated to a backup role.

Entering this season, many fans and analysts had Super Bowl hopes and expectations for the Giants. Unfortunately, injuries at wide receiver and a struggling offensive line didn’t put many points on the board. On the other side of the ball, a question of effort created a rift between players and coaches.

The unpopular McAdoo replaced Tom Coughlin after the 2015 season. Under McAdoo’s guidance and Reese’s free-agent acquisitions, the Giants performed well last year — especially on defense — finishing with an 11-5 regular season record.

The big question now is whether the 36-year-old Manning will stay with Big Blue at the end of this season, or if he’ll seek employment elsewhere.

Every WWE Champion Ever, Ranked by Number of Reigns (Photos)

Pro-wrestling championship belts change hands (or waists) like grapplers change trunks these days, though it wasn't always that way. With a few titles on the line Friday at "Super Showdown" -- including Kofi Kingston's WWE Championship -- TheWrap decided to grace the Internet with a little history lesson. Scroll through our gallery to see every WWE Champion ever, ranked by their numbers of title reigns.

Remember: this is a list of those who won the WWWF Championship, the WWF Championship or the WWE Championship. So don't come after us, Universal Champions, et al.

The kid from "The Real World" made good on his over-the-top MTV promos. One of the best on the mic, Miz has been holding down the Intercontinental Championship more than any other Superstar of the past few years.

History lesson: Back in the WWWF days, Morales became the first guy in wrestling history to win all three of the major men's titles -- the WWF Championship, the Intercontinental Championship and the WWF Tag Team Championship -- in the company.

From Buddy Rogers to Kofi Kingston, here are all the guys from the old WWWF and WWF days — and beyond

Pro-wrestling championship belts change hands (or waists) like grapplers change trunks these days, though it wasn't always that way. With a few titles on the line Friday at "Super Showdown" -- including Kofi Kingston's WWE Championship -- TheWrap decided to grace the Internet with a little history lesson. Scroll through our gallery to see every WWE Champion ever, ranked by their numbers of title reigns.

Remember: this is a list of those who won the WWWF Championship, the WWF Championship or the WWE Championship. So don't come after us, Universal Champions, et al.